Employer-sponsored insurance tax subsidy facts
Some don’t think the way employer-sponsored health insurance premiums are not taxed counts as a subsidy. I’m not that interested in semantics, more interested in
Some don’t think the way employer-sponsored health insurance premiums are not taxed counts as a subsidy. I’m not that interested in semantics, more interested in
GAO reports on use of Recovery Act funds for clean drinking water projects and budget enforcement mechanisms from todayand one from February 2011 on available
What’s the counter-argument I alluded to at the end of my post? You have to put on your market/choice/competition hat to see it (if you have one).
To follow-up on Aaron’s post, there’s another crucial difference between what we do on this blog and what we might do in a journal article
There’s a tension in academia between work that has and has not been peer-reviewed. Readers of the blog will know that – in general –
Julie Rovner’s quotes of Michael Cannon about Rep. Ryan’s plan for Medicare got me thinking. For example, Michael Cannon of the libertarian Cato Institute says having
Bruce Bartlett argues that President Obama can ignore the debt limit and instruct the Treasury Secretary to sell whatever securities necessary to keep the federal
The skewed distribution of health spending means something important. I’ll get to that. But first, to the data! I showed the following in a prior
the health services research blog
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